Attempting to help U.S. voters understand their ballot this election cycle, Facebook has launched a new tool that directs voters to information about candidates such as stances on issues, endorsements, recent Facebook posts and campaign websites.

Within the guide, you can add a candidate to your favorites list in order to walk into the voting booth with a detailed list of preferred candidates. After making all your selections, Facebook included a tool at the bottom of the voter guide to email yourself a copy of that preferred list.

Describing the motivation about creating a voter guide, Facebook product marketing manager Jeremy Galen said “We are encouraging civic engagement because we want to make it easier for people to participate and have a voice in the political process…We want to help people get information about the candidates and issues all the way down the ballot.”

To accomplish this, Facebook uses basic information about your state of residence to auto-fill the major races and statewide ballot propositions. As an optional feature, you can input your home address in order to see a more specific list of candidates and local ballot measures. Facebook provides a summary of the ballot propositions, links to public posts about the propositions and an option to ask your Facebook friends about their opinion of each ballot measure.

Of course, you can also share your list of preferred candidates with your Facebook friends directly from the voter guide. Since some Facebook users may want to keep their Presidential candidate preference private in order to avoid arguments with friends or family members, you can limit what you share on your feed to the down ballot races in your area.

Facebook has also included a tool to help you find local polling places. That link sends users to a site called Get to the Polls and requests a registered voting address in order to accurately provide a polling location. That site also includes the hours a polling place is open for early voting as well as Election Day voting.

You can find the voter guide on Facebook here.

Related Posts

WhatsApp has begun testing a long-overdue group chat feature

The Meta-owned messaging platform is testing a new feature called "group chat history sharing" (via a WABetaInfo report). As the name suggests, the feature lets a WhatsApp user (likely the admin) share the chat history (up to 100 messages sent within 14 days) with someone while adding them to a group.

You can now choose the kind of content you see on Instagram Reels

The announcement came from Instagram CEO Adam Mosseri, giving people a more direct way to shape the kind of videos they actually want to see. At its core, Your Algorithm lets users actively tune their Reels experience.

New UK under-5 screen time guidance targets passive time, what it changes for you

The push is rooted in government-commissioned research that links the highest screen use in two-year-olds, around five hours a day, with weaker vocabulary than peers closer to 44 minutes a day. Screens are already close to universal at age two, so the guidance is being framed as help you can actually use, not a ban.